Massacre on Tunisian beach, a beheading in France and suicide bomb set off in Kuwaiti mosque: Are today's attacks part 'month of calamities' planned by ISIS for Ramadan?

Fears have emerged that the terror attacks in Kuwait, France and Tunisia may have been part of ISIS's plans to mark the holy month of Ramadan with an unprecedented spate of violence 'against the non-believers'.

The UN Security Council issued the attacks in 'the strongest of terms' but it remains likely that these trio of attacks may not be the last incidents of carnage during the holy month of Ramadan.

One year after ISIS announced its self-proclaimed caliphate, experts are already suggesting that the attacks, although geographically spread out, may have been linked as part of co-ordinated spate of violence.

As depraved gunmen opened fire on a packed beach in Tunisia today, a factory owner was beheaded in France and 27 worshipers were massacred in a suicide bomb attack on a mosque in Kuwait. It has raised fears that ISIS could be marking the holy month of Ramadan, and the one year anniversary of its self-proclaimed caliphate, to violently 'rise up against the non-believers'.